At its peak, in the mid- to late seventies, the psychoanalytic
association known as the Sullivanian Institute had as many as six
hundred patient-members clustered in apartment buildings that the group
bought or rented on the cheap on Manhattan’s Upper West Side. They also
ran an experimental theatre troupe, called the Fourth Wall, on the Lower
East Side. The Sullivanians adhered to the same principles and
traditions as many of the ashrams and rural intentional communities of
the era: polyamory, communal living, group parenting, socialist
politics. But they came to their belief system through the gateway of
psychoanalysis, the self-actualization tool of the urbane intellectual.
And they enacted their beliefs on a crowded concrete island of nearly
eight million people, often while holding down high-status jobs as
physicians, attorneys, computer programmers, and academics. The
institute’s co-founder and reigning tyrant, Saul Newton, who sat atop
the organization from the mid-nineteen-fifties until the
mid-nineteen-eighties (he died in 1991), may have come closer than any
of his far more notorious peers to establishing a truly metropolitan
cult—its members visible but its practices obscure. Jessica Winter, The New Yorkerrensione dell'ultimo libro di Alexander Stille, The Sullivanians: Sex,
Psychotherapy, and the Wild Life of an American Commune (Farrar, Straus & Giroux), che sembra molto interessante!
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